How to re-grow celery from the base thank you Robin Shreeves for this post!
New celery will grow from the base of a used
stalk. Give it a try. For your efforts, you'll get a free, edible stalk
of celery in a few months and a fun experiment for the kids to keep an
eye on all summer vacation.
Photo: Robin Shreeves
Granted, this may not be the way to solve the world’s hunger problems,
but it’s a fun experiment. I saw a photo of celery re-growing on Pinterest, and I decided to give it a try.
I followed the Pinterest photo back to its original source on the 17 Apart blog
and followed the instructions. Take the base from a stalk of celery,
rinse it off, and put it in a shallow cup of warm water on a window
sill. Change the water daily and keep an eye on it to see if any
regrowth begins. As you can see from the photos below, there were
significant signs of regrowth within five days.
Day 1: Celery base put in water.
Day 5: Celery base after five days of the experiment. Water was changed daily.
There was little to do except change the water and look at it daily for
changes. As the middle of the base of celery began to re-grow healthy,
dark green leaves and eventually stalks, the outside of the base began
to turn brown and break down. That seemed perfectly natural, and I
assumed that when I finally planted the stalk in soil, the outside would
continue to break down and create natural nutrients for the new growth.
Day 8: Celery base with impressive, healthy regrowth.
It took only eight days for the regrowth to get to the point where I
needed to transplant it into soil. My son and I took a container, filled
it with organic potting soil, and planted the re-growing celery in the
container. We placed it on top of one of the cinder blocks that border
my vegetable garden so the rabbits couldn’t get reach it. We probably
should have surrounded it with barbed wire, too, because within two
days, it had been eaten down to a nub. The %$&* squirrels got to it!
I didn’t take any photos of the celery in the soil, but for the two
days it was in there, it continued to thrive. It didn’t seem to suffer
any transplant shock at all.
I suppose I’ll have to console myself with the fact that the regrowth
did end up as food — even if it wasn’t food I got to feed my family. It
would have been great to watch the celery grow into a full stalk to
harvest later in the summer and eat (and then see if we could get the
base from the new stalk to re-grow). But, I saw enough of the regrowth
to know that this was an experiment worth sharing. If you’re curious,
give it a try. And, if you have children who are getting out of school
just about now, this would be an easy, fun garden/science experiment to
do with them over the summer.
From what I read from various sources, it takes two to three months
(sometimes longer) for a mature stalk to grow. During that time, kids
could be keeping a regrowth journal, recording what they see, measuring
the height of the regrowth, and taking photos. My 10-year-old (yes, the
9-year-old I always write about turned 10 last week) eagerly checked on
the celery every day and took some photos.
You can also re-grow green onions
from their roots after you’ve used the green part. I think I may try
that next. I don’t think the squirrels would be as likely to eat them.